How to watch: No. 9 Oregon at Stanford in Week 5

The No. 9 Oregon Ducks will look to improve to 5-0 this Saturday when they travel to Palo Alto to face the Stanford Cardinal (1-3, 0-2).
The Ducks are coming off a dominant 42-6 win over the Colorado Buffaloes in Eugene in Week 4 that further elevated them into the College Football Playoff conversation. They will look to avoid slipping up against a Cardinal squad that fell 21-20 to Arizona last Saturday.
Last season, Oregon cruised to a 45-27 win over Stanford in Eugene. But the season prior, the Cardinal produced a 31-24 upset in Palo Alto to hand the Ducks their first loss of the season.
Here is everything you need to know in order to watch, stream, and listen to Oregon vs. Stanford in Week 5.
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No. 9 Oregon vs. Stanford (Week 5)
When: Saturday, Sept. 30 at 3:30 p.m. PT
Where: Stanford Stadium (50,424)
TV: Pac-12 Network
Stream: FuboTV, SlingTV, WatchESPN.com
Broadcast crew: Play-by-Play: Roxy Bernstein; analyst: Lincoln Kennedy
Radio: KUJZ-FM 95.3 (Eugene); KFXX-AM 1080 (Portland)
Betting Line (via Vegas Insider)
- Spread: Oregon -27.5
- Moneyline: Oregon – 4,500
- Total: 60.5
Oregon Injury report
- OL Nishad Strother (questionable)
- DL Tevita Pome’e (questionable)
- LB Jestin Jacobs (questionable)
- RB Noah Whittington (out)
- OL Lipe Moala (doubtful)
- K Andrew Boyle (doubtful)
- S Bryan Addison (probable)
Pregame reading
- Oregon reveals uniform combination for Week 5 at Stanford
- Oregon Week 5 practice observations
- ScoopDuck Roundtable: Score Predictions vs. Stanford
Key Quotes
Oregon coach Dan Lanning on the Ducks’ previous performance on the road at Texas Tech in Week 2
“Last time we played on the road, we didn’t perform the way we wanted to. So it’s an opportunity for us to go put a complete game together on the road. Just like I said, after the game: you can’t let your highs get too high and your lows get too low. Sometimes, after an emotional, win where there’s a lot of passion and energy in it. You can have a letdown when we’re certainly not looking to do that. We’re looking to go out and perform again to our absolute best.”
Lanning on Stanford’s defense and the challenges it presents
“They run a lot of different sim pressures. They do a variety of three-deep zones and quarters, and even man, so you’re gonna see a lot of different things from them,” Lanning said of Stanford’s defense. “I think they do a good job there, and I know it’s early for them, but they’re getting better and better each week on that side of the ball.”